Building a Container Water Garden

Once youve chosen a spot for your container water garden 
remember, 6 or more hours of direct sunlight a day, no overhanging
trees, and a nearby water source (and power source if youll be
using a circulating pump for a waterfall)  you get to the fun
part. Most home and garden supply store chains carry all the
materials you need to create small ponds, including plastic liners
 but youre only limited by your imagination and a few
basic rules in choosing a container for your water garden.

It must be easy to drain.It must be non-porous.It must be deep enough to support the plants you want to grow.

Ive seen water gardens that use everything from old bathtubs to
an assortment of terracotta pots (with plastic liners) to large
baskets (also with plastic liners).

For a container water garden, you wont actually be planting the
plants in the bottom of the pond. Instead, each plant
will be planted in its own separate pot and submerged in the water.

Red
Creek Wildlife Center is a licensed wildlife rehabilitation center
that treats injured and orphaned wildlife and releases them back into
the wild.

Every
time you search the internet, they receive 1 - 2 cents.

It's
free to use and you receive great Yahoo search results.

Try
GoodSearch Now and
BookMark the link:

Thank
you

Assemble your equipment
Youll need your containers, plants, bricks or terracotta pots,
gravel, heavy soil, aquatic plant fertilizer tablets and a garden hose.Pot your plants
If theyre not already in suitable pots, youll need to pot
your plants. Do not use potting soil, vermiculite or peat moss 
all of which will wash out of the pots and foul the water. Instead,
you want a very heavy, mud-clay like soil. Fill the pot 2/3 full with
soil. Push a fertilizer tablet into the soil, then carefully spread
the roots of the plant over the surface of the dirt. Add a few inches
of dirt and lightly tamp it down, then cover with an inch or so of
pea gravel. Repeat until all of your plants are potted.Arrange your plants in the container
This is where the bricks come in. The tops of the plant pots should
be no more than a few inches below the surface of the water. Stack
bricks, upended terracotta pots or construction blocks in the
container and place pots on top of them to vary the heights of the plants.Add pump for fountain or waterfall if using one.
If youre adding a fountain or a waterfall, situate the pump per
the manufacturers directions.Fill with water.
Using the garden hose, fill your container with water until the plant
pots are submerged under a few inches of water. If you fill
from the bottom by dropping the hose into the bottom of the
container and letting the water level rise, youll reduce the
chance of disturbing the soil and gravel in your plants.Enjoy.
Dont forget that the point of the exercise was to have a
lovely, cool water garden to enjoy. Make sure that you place a bench
or comfortable sitting rock nearby where you can enjoy the beauty of
your own miniature pond every day.